2. WHAT IS URBAN LIVELIHOOD
• Urban areas mean places where modernisation has occurred and
where there's a huge population. “Livelihoods” means what people
do for a living and the lifestyles they have. ...
3. URBAN LIVELIHOOD OF STREET WORKERS
• In towns and cities, it is easy to spot many people working in the streets. Some
examples are those of vegetable vendors, ice-cream sellers, cobblers, rickshaw
pullers, etc. These workers are self- employed people. Another special feature is
that there may be no permanent shop for them to carry out their occupation. Some
live and sell their products in shacks, some move around in bicycles and millions are
left to sleep beneath highway roads.
• Most of these workers have migrated from rural areas (villages) in search of earning
more money, but alas, the city life engulfs them. It is their basic right to earn a living
and thus, the government has started with many schemes to ensure their protection.
4. SELF EMPLOYED BUSINESSMEN
• What do you think of shopkeepers of medicine shops, clothes shop or a cafe? These
people are businessmen who have started their own enterprises. Some
businessmen are worth billions- like the owners of multinational companies, or some
are small enterprise owners, (like the owner of a sweet shop).
• Some businessmen fall into the category of organised sector, where their accounts
and businesses are recorded. However, small businessmen are self- employed in
the unorganised sector too. They invest some money into starting on their own and
slowly make profits. Business is a risky deal and it takes courage and creativity to
run a successful one!
5. FACTORY WORKERS
• Another one of the urban livelihoods in India is that of a factory
worker. These people are not formally employed and thus, fall in the
unorganised sector. Besides, they work as and when their employer
wants them to and earns a very small income for their work. Some
examples are sewers in clothes factories or labourers used for lifting
heavy packages. These people are hired and paid on an hourly basis
and it is not enough for them to subsist on generally.
6. WORKERS IN ORGANISED SECTOR
• A majority of urban livelihoods in India fall under this category of workers. Examples of
this is a marketing manager of a company, a civil engineer working on bridges, or a
doctor working in a hospital. They earn the highest ‘salary’ in the city per month, but they
don’t earn ‘hourly wages’ like labourers.
• These workers have several benefits, unlike street workers or factory labourers. These
benefits are like having a company’s retirement plan, a company’s medical insurance,
having paid leaves. Thus, we see what type of jobs are there in cities, ranging from self-
employing work on the streets, to working in big companies and corporates. Cities have
the richest and the poorest people and the gap in urban livelihoods is shocking and
unfortunate. As students of civics and responsible citizens, we must work towards
providing the underprivileged with basic necessities and support.